System, apparatus and method for coding cap and tube assemblies for different bottle sizes

ABSTRACT

Assemblies of a cap and a tube fixed to the cap are provided in which at least a portion of each assembly has a visual coding of color and/or indicia for use with one of different sizes of bottles at least in accordance with a height of the bottles from a closed bottom end to an open top end for engaging the cap of the assembly. In each assembly, the cap has a tube mounted to, or through, an aperture extending through the cap to extend a selected length enabling one end of the tube to reach or extend along at least a portion of an interior surface of the bottom end of any of the bottles of the height to which the assembly is coded for use therewith. Each of the caps has another tube or port to another aperture of the cap to provide an air vent.

This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 17/329,784, filed May 25, 2021, which is a continuation of U.S. Pat. No. 11,026,498, filed May 27, 2020, which is a continuation of International Patent Application No. PCT/US2019/034761, filed May 30, 2019, which claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/678,055, filed May 30, 2018, in which all of the above patents and applications are incorporated herein by reference.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to a system, apparatus, and method for coding cap and tube assemblies for different bottle sizes, and in particular to, a system, apparatus, and method for coding caps for different bottle sizes where each cap is in an assembly with a tube fixed to a proper length to reach or extend along an interior bottom of a bottle when engaging the cap coded for the size of such bottle, and to a system, apparatus, and method for coding tubes for different bottle sizes where each tube is in an assembly with a cap and fixed thereto to extend a proper length to reach or extend along an interior bottom of a bottle when engaging the tube coded for the size of such bottle. Thus, one of the cap or tube in each assembly is visually coded, along at least a portion thereof, for use with one of a plurality of different size bottles in accordance with the length of the tube. Further, both the cap and tube in each assembly may be visually coded, along at least a portion thereof, for use with one of a plurality of different size bottles in accordance with the length of the tube. Visual coding may be one of multiple colors each associated with a different bottle size, but indicia alternatively, or in addition to color, may be used to visually code bottle size. The invention is useful in experiments using a sealed bioreactor container or vessel, typically having multiple tubes providing feeder lines to bottles of different sizes, to assure that the ends of the feeder lines reach the interior bottom of such bottles, so that if needed, fluidic medium therein can be withdrawn down to such bottom. The invention further provides a plurality of apparatuses which may be in the form of kits each having at least a tube providing a feeder line and a cap in which one or both the tube and cap are coded for use with a different size bottle.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

A bioreactor is a manufactured or engineered container or vessel that supports a biologically active environment. Bio-tech research facilities use bioreactors for conducting experiments. Often when setting up or operating a bioreactor, one or more lines are each provided by tubing attached to the bioreactors in order to add or remove a medium from the environment of the bioreactor. Different size bottles are used depending on the amount being collected from or dispersed into the bioreactor. It is important that bottle size be selected so that the right length of feeder line tubing reaches or just extends along the interior bottom of the bottle so that contents therein can be fully drawn via the feeder lines from the bottles for use in the experiment as needed. With multiple sized bottles being used with multiple feeder lines each via a cap onto the bottles, there has been no quick way for a lab technician, scientist or researcher to be sure that they are using the right additive feeder line for the intended bottle. While bottle sizes are easily deciphered by visual inspection, the selection of feeder line tubing for bottles are not. It would be desirable to provide a system which reduces errors in setting up additive feeder lines to avoid a bioreactor based experiment failing prematurely due to incompatible bottles being used due to feeder lines not reaching the bottom of such bottles. Further, it would be desirable to readily inspect an experiment with additive feeder lines to bottle size so that any errors can be corrected prior to running the experiment or can be quickly changed before the experiment prematurely fails.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

Accordingly, it is a feature of the present invention to provide a system, apparatus, and method for coding caps with tubes which can provide feeder lines for different bottle sizes, so that such tubes will be of proper length to reach an interior bottom of bottles when engaging the caps coded for the size of such bottles in order to assure that fluidic medium content can be withdrawn to the bottom of the bottles.

It is further feature of the present invention to provide a system, apparatus, and method for coding tubes to different bottle sizes, where such tubes are mounted to, or through, caps, so that the tubes will be of proper length to reach an interior bottom of bottles when engaging the caps with tubes coded for the size of such bottles in order to assure that fluidic medium content can be withdrawn to the bottom of the bottles.

Another feature of the present invention is to provide a plurality of apparatuses each an assembly of at least a tube and a cap in which at least along a portion of the assembly is coded for use with one of different sizes of bottles, where such apparatuses may be provided to users as kits.

Briefly described, the system embodying the present invention comprises a plurality of caps having visual coding for use with different sizes of bottles at least in accordance with a height of the bottles from their closed bottom end to their opposing open end suitable for engaging each of the caps. Each of the caps comprises a tube mounted to, or through, the cap to extend a selected length which enables one end of the tube to reach or extend along an interior surface of the closed bottom end of any of the bottles of the height to which the cap is coded for use therewith when engaging the cap.

Preferably, the caps are each provided with a visual coding of color, along at least a portion of the cap, and/or indicia on a label along the cap, of one of a plurality of colors associating the cap for use with different sizes of bottles at least in accordance with a height of the bottles. When each of the caps are visually coded by color, the color may be in the plastic material forming the body of the cap, and/or in the material of the cap having an aperture for the tube, and/or in the color of ink printed or coated upon an adhesively applied label to the cap. When each of the caps are visually coded by indicia, each of the caps has one of a plurality of different indicium preferably of one of the plurality of colors, but other indicium may be used to provide visual coding.

Each of the caps have at least one aperture, and means for fixing the tube to provide such selected length when extended through, or received in the aperture, in accordance with the visual coding of the cap. Such means provided may be mechanical locking element(s) along the interior of the aperture, such as barbed ring(s) or projection(s), a clamp or other member along exterior of the aperture that mechanically couples the tube to the cap, a bonding material, e.g., liquid adhesive, applied along the interior of the aperture, frictional engagement of the tube in the aperture, externally applied heat bonding the tube to the cap, such as by ultrasonic welding, or a combination thereof, to fix position of the tube with respect to the cap to retain its selected length.

Where such end of the tube receivable in a bottle represents a proximal end of such tube, the other or distal end of such tube extends away from the cap to a bioreactor container or vessel for communication of gas or fluid there through, enabling the tube to provide a feeder line to the bioreactor container or vessel through which contents of the bottle may transfer to the bioreactor, or be collected from the bioreactor in the bottle, as desired.

Alternatively, when the tube providing the selected length is mounted in an aperture of the cap, such tube is mounted into a lower end of such aperture, and another tube is mounted to an upper end of the aperture and extends away from the cap to a bioreactor container or vessel for communication of gas or fluid there through. Such another tube has one end either mounted into a port along the cap to such upper end of the aperture, or onto a port along the cap to such upper end of the aperture, such as by engaging barbs along the port's exterior to retain the tube to the cap.

Each of the caps further has an air vent through the cap provided by another aperture extending through a closed top end of the cap different from the one associated with the tube extended to a selected length from the cap. Another tube has a proximal end mounted to extend at least partially through such another aperture, and a distal end with an optional filtering device to filter air passing through the tube. Alternatively to using another tube, a port may be provided along the cap to such another aperture onto which such optional filtering device can be mounted.

The present invention further provides a method for coding caps for different bottle sizes comprising steps of: providing caps visually coded, such as by one or more of color or indicia, for use with different size bottles at least in accordance with height of the bottles; and mounting a tube to, or through, an aperture extending through each of the caps, to extend the tube to a length which enables one end of the tube to reach or extend along a bottom of any of the bottles of the height to which the cap is coded for when engaging the cap.

The mounting step further comprises a step of fixing the tube to extend the selected length when mounted to, or extended through, an aperture of each of the caps which enables one end of the tube to reach or extend along a bottom of any of the bottles of the height to which the cap is coded for when engaging the cap. In operation, each one of the caps engages onto an open end of one of the bottles having at least the height to which such cap is visually coded for.

The present invention also provides an apparatus having at least one tube having proximal and distal ends, and a cap having at least one aperture, extending through a closed top end of the cap, which is sized to receive the tube. Such tube is mounted to, or through, the aperture to extend a length from the cap to its proximal end. The cap is visually coded with one of a plurality of colors and/or indicia associated with bottles having one of a plurality of different sizes. The length of the tube from the cap to its proximal end is selected to enable such proximal end to reach or extend along an interior along the bottom end of any of the bottles of such one of the different sizes to which the cap is visually coded for. The cap may have another aperture through the closed top end of the cap to provide an air vent, which either extends to a port along the cap, or sized to receive a proximal end of an additional tube where the distal end of the additional tube extends away from the bottle when engaging the cap. The distal end of the port or such additional tube may further have an optional air filtering device mounted thereupon.

Preferably, each of the tubes in the above-described system, method and apparatus are flexible and can thus bend or flex about their lengths. To account for such flexibility, the selected length of the tube, when mounted, or extended through, each cap is the same as the height of one of the bottles to which the cap is visually coded for plus preferably an additional tolerance (or offset) to assure that the end of the tube will reach or just extend along the interior bottom of such bottles when engaging the cap even with any bend or flexure of the tube. The tolerance is selected, in addition to enabling the end of the tube to reach or extend along the interior bottom of bottles despite any flexure(s), is limited in range to avoid the tube being too long that it could undesirably cause the end of the tube to bend or flex away from the interior bottom of the bottle, thereby making it difficult to fully withdraw contents all the way to the bottom of the bottle.

Alternatively to visually coding caps, such tubes fixed to the caps to extend a selected length may be visually coded for different bottle sizes. Accordingly, the present invention provides a system having a plurality of caps, and a plurality of tubes having visual coding along at least a portion thereof for use with different sizes of bottles at least in accordance with a height of the bottles. Each of the plurality of tubes being mounted to, or through, a different one of the caps to extend a selected length which enables one end of the tube to reach or extend along at least a portion of an interior surface of a closed bottom end of any of the bottles of the height to which the tube is coded for use therewith when engaging such one of the cap.

The present invention further provides a method for coding tubes for different bottle sizes comprising steps of: providing tubes visually coded for use with different size bottles at least in accordance with height of the bottles; and mounting each of the tubes to, or through, a different one of a plurality of caps to extend a selected length which enables one end of the tube to reach or extend along at least a portion of an interior surface of a closed bottom end of any of the bottles of the height to which the tube is coded for use therewith when engaging the one of the different one of the plurality of caps.

The present invention also provides an apparatus having a tube having two ends, and a cap having at least an aperture extending through a closed top end of the cap. Such aperture being sized to receive the tube, and the tube being mounted to, or through, the cap to extend a length from the cap to one of the two ends of the tube, and the tube is fixed in position with respect to the aperture. The tube is visually coded with one of a plurality of colors along at least a portion thereof to associate the apparatus with bottles having one of a plurality of different sizes in terms of at least one dimension, e.g., height, and the length of the tube from the cap to such one of ends of the tube being selected to enable that end of the tube to reach or extend along at least a portion of an interior of a closed bottom end of any of the bottles having such one of the plurality of different sizes when engaging the cap.

In such system, method, and apparatus having tubes which are visually coded, each tube has at least a portion thereof of one of a plurality of different colors to provide such visual coding. For example, the tubes may each be formed entirely of colored material, or have one or more colored stripes, where the color of such material or stripe(s) is associated with a selected length (when affixed to a cap) in accordance with one of the plurality of different sizes at least in terms of height. Optionally, the different one of the caps associated with each of the plurality of tubes has at least along a portion thereof a same or similar one of the plurality of different colors which provides the visual coding of the tube. In this manner, the cap and its tube assembled therewith may both have along at least a portion thereof, the same or similar (at least approximately) visual code. As described earlier, preferably each of the tubes are flexible and can thus bend or flex about their lengths, and the selected length of the tube accounts for such flexibility to assure that it reaches, or at least extends along a portion of, the interior of any of the bottles of height to which the tube is coded for use therewith.

A different visual color is designated for each different size of bottles, at least in terms of height, to assure proper tube length to reach or extend along as least a portion of the bottom of the bottles in accordance with such height. While preferably different colors are utilized each associated with a different bottle size, indicia (such as an applied label) may alternatively be used along caps and/or tubes, or in addition to color, to visually code bottle size. Further, while a single color is preferably used, multiple or additional color(s) may be provided to provide desired visual coding association for different size bottles.

The apparatus may represent a kit in a package or carton containing at least the cap, the tube mounted in, or through, the aperture of the cap to its fixed position with respect to the cap for its selected length in accordance with visual coding of the cap and/or tube for bottles associated with such selected length. The kit may further enclose items, such as the additional tube and an optional air filtering device mountable thereupon. In the case where the tube is mounted in a lower end of the aperture of the cap for extension to its selected length in accordance with visual coding of the cap and/or tube for bottles associated with such selected length, a further tube may be provided in the kit mounted in the same aperture, but from the upper end thereof. The apparatus represents one of a multiple different apparatuses or kits, where each has one of the caps and/or one of the tubes visually coded with a different one of the plurality of colors associated with bottles of different bottle sizes at least in terms of bottle height.

Optionally, one or more of the bottles each has a matching visual coding, such as along at least a portion of the bottle, as with those caps, and/or tubes assembled with a cap, which are coded for use therewith. In the case where at least a portion of the caps, tubes, and/or indicia (applied thereto) have one of a plurality of different colors to provide visual coding, bottles may each have an adhesively applied label, or the material forming all or a portion of the bottles, may provide the same or similar color matching the visual coding color which are coded for use with such bottles. Accordingly, the present invention further embodies a bottle, i.e., a container in a shape of a bottle, having an open end and a closed bottom end with an interior surface, wherein the bottle extends a height between its the open and closed ends. The open end is configured for engaging an assembly of a cap having a tube mounted thereto, or there through, extending a selected length in accordance with the height of the bottle so that one end of the tube will reach, or extend along at least a portion of, the interior surface of the closed bottom end, in which at least a portion of the assembly has one or more of visual color and indicia coding such assembly for use with the bottle of such height. At least a portion of the container or a label affixed to the container matches such one or more visual color and indicia to assist a user in selecting the bottle having the height for engagement with the assembly when coded for use therewith.

By selection of an apparatus of a cap and tube assembled therewith, where at least a portion thereof is visually coded to bottles sized for such apparatus in accordance with the length of the tube from the cap, such tube when providing a feeder line (or part of a feeder line), automatically reach or extend along the bottoms of such bottles thereby improving experimental setup and operation by reducing human error in potentially using a missized bottle for a feeder line, and further readily enables visual verification of experimental setup. Another advantage is that each assembly of the cap and at least the tube fixed thereto to extend into a bottle are preferably made of materials, e.g., plastics, which can be sterilized in manner typical of laboratory equipment, and may be maintained in a sterile environment in their packaged kits until use.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The foregoing and other features and advantages of the invention will become more apparent from a reading of the following description in connection with the accompanying drawings in which:

FIG. 1 is a perspective view of one of the apparatuses of the present invention having a cap with extending tubes, where the apparatus is shown engaged to an example bottle;

FIG. 2 is an exploded view of the apparatus of FIG. 1 and the example bottle;

FIG. 3 is a side view of the apparatus of FIG. 1 removed from the example bottle showing an example of an assembly of the cap and the tube fixed thereto;

FIG. 4A is a cross-sectional view of the apparatus of FIG. 1 along line 4-4 in direction of arrows as the ends of such line with the bottle removed;

FIG. 4B is a cross-sectional view of the apparatus of FIG. 1 along line 4-4 in direction of arrows as the ends of such line showing the example bottle of FIG. 1 engaged to the apparatus;

FIG. 5A is a top view of the apparatus of FIG. 3 having an optional clamp for mechanically locking or fixing the position of one of the tubes with respect to the cap of the apparatus;

FIG. 5B is a partial broken view of FIG. 4A along the cap of the apparatus in which the locking members of FIG. 4A are removed from the apertures of the cap that receive tubes, and the optional clamp of FIG. 5A and optional bonding material are shown for locking or fixing position of one of the tubes to one of the apertures;

FIG. 5C is a partial broken cross-sectional view similar to FIG. 4A showing another embodiment of the cap of the apparatus of FIG. 1;

FIG. 5D is a partial broken cross-sectional view similar to FIG. 4A showing a further embodiment of the cap of the apparatus of FIG. 1;

FIG. 5E is a partial broken cross-sectional view similar to FIG. 4A showing a still further embodiment of the cap of the apparatus of FIG. 1;

FIGS. 6A and 6B are perspective and top views, respectively, of an insert molded portion of the cap of the apparatus of FIGS. 1, 2, 3, 4A, and 4B, such insert molded portion being shown without tubes and removed from the cylindrical body of the cap in order to illustrate tube position locking elements along apertures of the cap for the tubes;

FIG. 6C is a cross-sectional view of the insert molded cap portion of FIG. 6A along line 6C-6C in direction of arrows as the ends of such line;

FIG. 6D is a cross-sectional view of the insert molded cap portion of FIG. 6C along line 6D-6D in direction of arrows as the ends of such line;

FIG. 6E is a cross-sectional view of the insert molded cap portion of FIG. 6C along line 6E-6E in direction of arrows as the ends of such line;

FIGS. 7A, 7B, and 7C are side views of an example of three different apparatuses in the system of the present invention, where each apparatus has a cap with a different length tube locked or fixed to the cap, where the caps are visually coded for different sized bottles by each being a different color so that their respective tube is of a length that will reach or extend along the interior bottom of such bottles when engaged to the caps;

FIGS. 8A, 8B, and 8C are cross-sectional views of FIGS. 7A, 7B, and 7C, respectively, along lines 8A-8A, 8B-8B, 8C-8C, respectively, in direction of arrows at the ends of such lines;

FIG. 9 is a perspective view of the apparatuses of FIGS. 7A, 7B, and 7C with example bottles engaged thereto;

FIG. 10 is another perspective view of a system of the apparatuses of FIGS. 7A, 7B, and 7C with example bottles engaged thereto, where caps of the apparatuses are of the same color, caps are visually coded for different sized bottles using labels applied to the caps having different color and/or indicia denoted by different cross-hatching, and optional visual coding of bottles are shown using labels matching visual coding of caps;

FIG. 11 is another perspective view of a system of the apparatuses of FIGS. 7A, 7B, and 7C with example bottles engaged thereto, where instead of caps of the apparatuses providing visual coding, the tubes fixed to the caps are each visually coded for different sized bottles by each being a different color so that the tube is of a length that will reach or extend along the interior bottom of such bottles when engaged to the caps;

FIG. 12 is the same perspective view of FIG. 11, where tubes extend from caps of FIG. 5C or 5E into bottles and such tubes are visually coded for different sized bottles by different colors; and

FIG. 13 is the same perspective view of FIG. 11, where tubes mounted to, or through, caps are visually coded for different sized bottles by stripes of different colors along the tubes.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

Referring to FIGS. 1, 2, 3, 4A, and 4B, a cap 10 is shown having two apertures 12 and 13 which receive two tubes 14 and 15, respectively, to provide one of apparatuses 11 attachable to a bottle 16. Tube 14 extends through aperture 12 to a proximal end 18 and is mounted in a fixed position with respect to cap 10 so that tube 14 has a portion 17 thereof which extends to end 18. Portion 17 of tube 14 is of a fixed length L (FIGS. 4A and 4B) from aperture 12 to end 18 so that such end 18 will reach the interior surface 19 of a closed bottom end 20 b of bottle 16 when cap 10 engages onto a top end 20 a of bottle 16. The other tube 15 has a proximal end 22 mounted in aperture 13 of cap 10, and a distal end 23 with an optional air filtering device 40 mounted thereto. The distal end 21 of tube 14 extends from cap 10 and may of a variable length as desired by the user for attachment as a typical feeder line tubing to a bioreactor vessel (not shown) so that apparatus 11 enables communication of gas and/or fluid there through to or from the bottle 16 upon which the apparatus 11 is engaged. To facilitate communication of fluid, tube 15 is mounted to cap 10 in apparatus 11 to provide an air vent. An example of one of bottles 16 engaged to apparatus 11 is shown in FIGS. 1 and 4B when portion 17 of tube 14 is of a proper length selected for the bottle 16. FIGS. 3 and 4A show the assembled apparatus 11, i.e., an assembly of cap 10 fixed to tube 14, prior to attachment to bottle 16. The example bottle 16 shown in FIGS. 1 and 4A need not be considered part of apparatus 11.

As caps 10 with different length portions 17 of their tube 14 are needed to engage bottles 16 of different sizes, at least in terms of the height dimension H (FIG. 4B) of the bottle 16 between its top end 20 a and opposing bottom end 20 b, the present invention provides a system of multiple caps 10 visually coded for associated use with different bottle sizes where each differently coded cap 10 has a portion 17 of tube 14 extending therefrom of a length selected in accordance with the bottle 16 of the proper size, at least in height, coded for that cap. This enables users, such as laboratory technicians, scientists or researchers, in experiments using a bioreactor vessel (device or container) to easily visually associate the proper cap 10 by its visual coding for the particular size of bottle 16 such that the portion 17 of tube 14 from the cap 10 will be of a length enabling fluidic contents of the bottle to be withdrawn all the way to the bottom 20 b of the bottle 16, if needed. Preferably, caps 10 are coded by visually presenting on at least a portion of the cap one of multiple different colors each associated with a different bottle size, and indicia may in addition, or alternatively, be provided to similarly code by bottle size. Examples of different ones of apparatus 11 in the system of caps so visually coded for different sizes of bottles are shown in FIGS. 7A-C, 8A-C, and 9, as will be described later.

Filtering device 40 is connected to tube 15 by frictionally engagement into end 23, which extend away from cap 10 and the bottle 16 when engaged to such cap. Filtering device 40 has an internal screen or membrane to prevent undesirable material, such as particulates, from entering tube 15 and thus into the bottle 16 when attached to cap 10. For example, filtering device 40 may be Whatman Puradisc 25 mm diameter syringe filter with a Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) membrane having a 0.2 micrometer pore size, available from GE Healthcare, model number 6785-2502, or a 25 mm syringe filter with a PVDF membrane, such as manufactured by Pall Corporation of Port Washington, N.Y., U.S.A., but other air filtering devices may be used with different sized openings or pores, and otherwise mechanically coupled to tube 15. Also, an optional protective plug 41 may be inserted into end 21 of tube 14. Such plug 41 is removed prior to attachment of tube 14 for communication with a bioreactor vessel (not shown). The end 18 of tube 14 is preferably cut to a triangular shape, rather than square cut, to avoid risk of its abutment to surface 19 along bottom 20 b inadvertently closing tube 14. Tubes 14 and 15 may each be of flexible tubing, such as thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU) material, but other tube material may be used.

Cap 10 is composed of a cylindrical body 24 with an insert molded portion 25 providing apertures 12 and 13. Cylindrical body 24 is of rigid plastic material, such as molded polypropylene, polycarbonate, or other polymer, shaped to form a cap or cover that can close over open top end 20 a of bottle 16 (FIGS. 2 and 4B). As best shown in FIGS. 4A and 4B, body 24 has a upper end 26 a and a lower end 26 b, with a generally cylindrical wall 27 and a central opening 28 extending between ends 26 a and 26 b. Along opening 28 at upper end 26, wall 27 inwardly extends to provide an annular flange or lip 30 which reduces the diameter of opening 28 at upper end 26 a about a circular edge 29. Vertical ridges 27 a may be provided along the outer surface of cylindrical wall 27 to assist a user in manually turning cap 10 when engaging upon (or disengaging from) a bottle 16. In the case where different colors are used to code caps for different size bottles 16, preferably different cylindrical bodies 24 are molded which are the same, but for being of plastic material of one of the different colors.

Elastomeric material is insert molded onto cylindrical body 24 to form portion 25 and overmolds along annular lip 30 so that part of the material extends below annular lip 30 while the rest extends there above along upper end 26 a of cylindrical body 24. Cylindrical body 24 has small holes 31 spaced along annular lip 30 so that when over molding body 24 the material forming member 25 flows through holes 31 to assist in mechanically locking portion 25 in a fixed position onto body 24 in the completed cap 10. The elastomeric material of portion 25 is a polymer (or rubber) having for example a durometer (hardness) of 70A, but other durometer material may be used as desired. While portion 25 closes the top end 26 a of body 24, along portion 25, between its top 25 a and bottom 25 b, apertures 12 and 13 are formed coaxial with each other having a longitudinal dimension parallel to the height of cylindrical body 24 between its ends 26 a and 26 b. Tubes 14 and 15 having an outer diameter, such as for example 0.25 inches, which is slightly more than the diameter of apertures 12 and 13 so that material of portion 25 along the interior of apertures 12 and 13 can deform in response to receiving tubes 14 and 15, respectively, to enable their sealing engagement in cap 10 along portion 25. Other diameter tubes 14 and 15 may be used, which may be the same of different from each other, and having apertures 12 and 13 sized in diameter for enable sealing engagement therewith. Portion 25 of cap 10 above annular lip 30 provides the top 34 a of cap 10 with a level central circular surface 32 through which apertures 12 and 13 extend, and a beveled outer circular surface 33, but other shape than beveled may be used such as square. For purposes of illustration, the insert molded portion 25 of cap 10 is shown removed from cylindrical body 24 in the exploded view of FIG. 2.

As shown in FIGS. 4A and 4B, cap 10 has an interior cavity 35 provided by central opening 28 in cylindrical body 24 extending from insert molded portion 25 at top 34 a of cap 10 to an open bottom 34 b of cap 10 provided by bottom 26 b of cylindrical body 24. Cylindrical body 24 of cap 10 is dimensioned so that a cylindrical extension (or neck) 36 at the open top end 20 a of a bottle 16 that can be received in cavity 35 of cap 10 via its open bottom 34 b. When so received, threads 37 along the interior surface of wall 27 of cap 10 engage exterior threads 38 along cylindrical extension 36, as best shown in FIG. 4B, such that turning the bottle 16 and cap 10 with respect to each other tightens the cap upon the bottle, thus enabling engagement of cap 10 to bottle 16. The elastomeric material of portion 25 of cap 10 under annular lip 30 may then provide a gasket enabling cap 10 to sealingly engage against the bottle 16 along a top edge 39 thereof. Thus, cap 10 can sealingly engage bottle 16 while providing tubes 14 and 15 in communication with the interior of the bottle when the cap closes the open top end 20 a of the bottle as shown for example in FIG. 4B. An optional collar 36 a at the base of cylindrical extension 36 may align to face the bottom 34 b of cap 10 when engaged upon bottle 16.

Referring to FIGS. 6A, 6B, 6C, 6D, and 6E, one or more mechanical locking elements are provided to mechanically fix the position of tube 14 with respect to aperture 12 of cap 10 to retain portion 17 of tube 14 at its selected length, as described earlier. The cap's insert molded portion 25 is shown removed from the cap in FIGS. 6A, 6B, 6C, 6D, and 6E, where dashed lines in FIG. 6B show where cylindrical body 25 was overmolded. Mechanical locking elements may be barbs in the form of barbed rings 42 or a ring of barbed projections 44 extending radially inward from the interior surface of aperture 12. Preferably, multiple barbed rings 42 or rings of barbed projections 44 are provided along aperture 12 between ends 25 a and 25 b, as shown in FIGS. 6A, 6B, 6C, 6D, and 6E (and in cross-sectional views of FIGS. 4A and 4B), but a single barbed ring 42 or single ring of barbed projections 44 may be used in aperture 12. For purposes of illustration, barbed projections 44 are shown in aperture 12, and multiple barbed rings 42 are shown in aperture 13 for fixing position of tubes 14 and 15, respectively, however the same or different form of such mechanical locking elements may be used in both apertures 12 and 13. The barbed rings 42 or projections 44 as best shown in FIGS. 6E and 6D, respectively, may each have a right triangle shape. Cross-sectionally in a direction along the aperture's radius, each ring 42 or projection 44 has two surfaces extending from the wall of aperture 12 or 13, one surface facing end 25 a and the other surface facing end 25 b. The surface facing end 25 a represents the hypotenuse of a right angle made by the surface facing 25 b with the longitudinal dimension of the wall of the aperture, such that the two surfaces converge distally from the wall to form a barbed ring or projection. However barbed rings or projections may have other cross-sectional shapes.

After extending tubes 14 and 15 in respective apertures 12 and 13 as described earlier, external pressure from mechanically locking elements 42 or 44 (FIGS. 4A, 4B, 6A, 6B, 6C, 6D, and 6E) therein bears against the outer surfaces of the tubes thereby mounting them in a fixed position in the respective apertures (FIG. 4B). Such mechanically locking elements 42 or 44 may be formed when portion 25 is insert molded onto cylindrical body 24 of cap 10, and thus are of the same material as portion 25. Preferably, barbed rings 42 or projections 44 when present allow tube 14 or 15 to be inserted and pulled/pushed through aperture 12 or 13, respectively, from end 25 a in a direction toward end 25 b through cavity 35 of cap 10 due to downward angle of each barbed ring or projection surface facing end 25 a with respect to the aperture wall, but such same rings or projections resist passage of such tube in the opposite direction where they then lock (or at least resist movement) fixing the tube in its aperture of cap 10.

Alternatively, or in addition if needed, other mechanical locking or fixing elements may be used, such as a clamp 46 shown in FIGS. 5A and 5B. Clamp 46 is a stainless steel loop 47 having two ends 48 wrapped about tube 14 along top 34 a of cap 10 so that as steel loop 47 is crimped about tube 14, it also grips into material of portion 25 of along top 34 a. While tube 14 extends to a selected length and then so mechanically locked to mount tube 14 to cap 10 by element 42, 44, or 46 in accordance with the visual coding, e.g., color and/or indicia code, associated with the cap 10 which receives tube 14, tube 15 can be extended through aperture 13 as shown in FIG. 4A or partially through the aperture 13 with or without mechanical locking element(s).

Non-mechanical locking or fixing elements may be used instead of, or in addition to, mechanical locking elements 42, 44, or 46, in the form of liquid adhesive (or other bonding material) 49 (FIG. 5B) which when cured locks the position tube 14 with respect to aperture 12 of cap 10. Such liquid adhesive may be placed along the top and/or bottom of portion 25 of cap 10 around the exterior surface of the tube extended in aperture 12. Preferably, the adhesive can bind to materials forming both portion 25 and the tubes. Tube 15 may be similarly locking in position in aperture 13 if desired. As described earlier, apertures 12 and 13 of cap 10 are of a diameter to enable their associated tubes 14 and 15 to seal about the surfaces of cap 10 which abut around tubes 14 and 15. The use of liquid adhesive in one or both apertures 12 and 13 can better assure such seal along one or both tubes 14 and 15, respectively. Tube 14, once so locked in position by either liquid adhesive (or other bonding material) 49 or clamp 46, is non-adjustable positionally fixed to cap 10 with respect to aperture 12. Other non-mechanical locking or fixing without elements 42, 44, or 46 are shown in FIGS. 5C, 5D, and 5E.

Referring to FIG. 5C, another embodiment of cap 10 is shown in which the cap is composed of a generally cylindrical body 24 a with open bottom end 26 b, and closed top end 26 a but for two apertures 12 a and 13 a that extend there through. Each of apertures 12 a and 13 a has an upper end that extends through ports 12 b and 13 b, respectively, which extend upward along the topside of end 26 a of cap 10. Tubes 14 a and 15 are received into apertures 12 a and 13 a, respectively, via ports 12 b and 13 b, respectively. Apertures 12 a has a lower end that extends through a port 12 c along the cap 10 disposed opposite port 12 b along the underside of end 26 a. One of two ends of a tube 14 b is received in aperture 12 a into port 12 c via open end 26 b so that the other of such ends of tube 14 b provides end 18 of portion 17 as described above. The diameter of apertures 12 a and 13 a at ports 12 b, 12 c, and 13 c, respectively, are each slightly smaller than the outer diameter of tubes 14 a, 14 b, and 15, respectively, so that the respective end of such tubes 14 a, 14 b, and 15 frictionally engage when pushed into ports 12 b, 12 c, and 13 c to mount or fix the tubes to cap 10. In this case, tube 14 as described earlier is provided by two tubes 14 a and 14 b, and if those tubes are not in abutment in aperture 12 a, further provided by such portion of aperture 12 a between tubes 14 a and 14 b, so that so that tubes 14 a and 14 b are in communication with each other via aperture 12 a to enable passage of gas or fluids there through to or from bottle 16 when engaging cap 10. The body 24 a forming the cap 10 and its apertures 12 a and 12 b, and ports 12 b, 12 c, and 13 b, may be of the same rigid plastic material as described for body 24 without need for elastomeric portion 25. The cap 10 of FIG. 5C operates in the same manner as described above, but where portion 17 of tube 14 is represented by tube 14 b being positionally fixed to extend partially through aperture 12 a when mounted by frictionally engagement in port 12 c of the cap, and tube 14 b is same, or approximately the same, selected length L from the cap's top end 26 a to end 18 as shown in FIGS. 4A and 4B in accordance with the visually coding of cap 10. Thus, FIG. 3 also illustrates cap 10 of FIG. 5C where portion 17 of tube 14 is provided by tube 14 b in the assembled apparatus 11, i.e., an assembly of cap 10 fixed to tube 14 b, prior to attachment to bottle 16. Tube 14 a may extend away from the cap 10 to a bioreactor container or vessel (not shown) in the same manner as tube 14.

Referring to FIG. 5D, a further embodiment of cap 10 is shown in which a portion 25 c of cap 10 provides apertures 12 d and 13 d that extend along the upper end 26 a of the cap. Each of apertures 12 d and 13 d has an upper end that extends through ports 12 e and 13 e, respectively, which extend upward along the topside of end 26 a of cap 10. Tube 14 extends through aperture 12 d, via port 12 e, by having the diameter of aperture 12 d slightly smaller than the outer diameter of tube 15. Port 13 e provides an air vent through aperture 13 d, and optional filter device 40, as described earlier, may be mounted in upper open end 13 g of aperture 13 d to filter air, and thus tube 15 is not needed. Ports 12 e provides an extended portion of cap 10 for enabling application of heat thereto to weld or bond portion 25 c material at ports 12 e to tube 14, where such positionally fixes tube 14 after portion 17 of tube 14 is extended to its selected length L in accordance with the visually coding of cap 10. Such heat may be provided by an ultrasonic welder or other externally applied heating mechanism. Portion 25 c may be formed in the same manner as portion 25 described earlier and of the same material, but with the extensions provided by ports 12 e and 12 f. However, other material may be used to form portion 25 c which enables by applied heat thereto to weld or bond portion 25 c at least a portion of the material along port 12 e to tube 14 to mount or fix tube 14 to cap 10. Once such portion of cap 10 is bonded or welded to tube 14, tube 14 is non-adjustable positionally fixed to cap 10 with respect to aperture 12 d.

Referring to FIG. 5E, a still further embodiment of cap 10 is shown in which the cap is composed of a body 24 b with two apertures 12 a and 13 a that extend through the closed top end 26 a of the cap similar to the cap of FIG. 5C. Each of apertures 12 a and 13 a has an upper end that extends through ports 12 f and 13 f, respectively, which extend upward along the topside of end 26 a of cap 10. Concentric barbs 24 c are provided along the outer diameter of each of ports 12 f and 13 f. Each of tubes 14 a and 15 are pushed over upon their respective port 12 f and 13 f so that the barbs 24 c engage the interior of the tube to retains the tube to the port, and thus to cap 10. Other than the engagement of tubes 14 a and 15, other elements of cap 10 are the same as described in connection with FIG. 5C, where port 12 c is provided along the underside of end 26 a of the cap opposite port 12 f for retaining tube 14 b therein, and the communication of tubes 14 a and 14 b via aperture 12 a. Optionally, a heat shrinkable sleeve may be placed around each of tubes 14 a and/or 15 when engaged upon ports 12 f and/or 13 f, respectively, so that with applied heat to the material of the sleeve shrinks to further lock the tube to its port.

The apparatus 11 may be provided in a kit having a cap 10 with a tube 14 (or tube 14 b of FIGS. 5C and 5E) mechanically and/or non-mechanically locked thereto, as described above, to a fixed length along portion 17 for the particular visual coding, e.g., color and/or indicia code, for the cap. Other than the cap 10 being pre-assembled with tube 14, the other components of the kit, such as tube 15, and optional filtering device 40 and plug 41, may be provided as separate elements in the kit so that the user can complete assembly of apparatus 11 before or after engagement of cap 10 of the kit to a desired bottle 16. The kit is provided in a package or carton for assembly of apparatus 11. Optionally, tube 15 (or tube 14 a of FIGS. 5C and 5E) may be pre-mounted to the cap 10 in the kit, as described earlier. The filtering device 40 and plug 41 may be pre-mounted to their respective tubes as well. In the case of FIG. 5D, tube 15 is not needed and filtering device 40 may be pre-mounted at end 13 g of port 13 d in the kit. Each kit preferably is for use with a particular size of bottles 16 coded for the cap 10 of the kit, and different kits may be provided each with apparatus 11 with a different one of cap 10 visually coded for a different bottle size. Thus caps 10 in each of the kit are identical, except for the being visually coded for different size bottles in accordance with the selected length of mounted tube 14 (or 14 b of FIGS. 5C and 5E) locked (positionally fixed) to the cap 10 along its aperture 12 (or 12 a). However, a single kit may have multiple caps, and tubes 14 so locked therein, coded for the same or different size bottles. The visual coding along caps readily distinguishes different coded caps from each other in the system for using caps with different size bottles, and without requiring user observation of the length tubing 14 fixed to caps receivable in bottles to assure they reach or extend to the bottom thereof.

FIGS. 7A, 7B, 7C, 8A, 8B, and 8C show an example of the system of the present invention with three different apparatuses 11 labelled 11 a, 11 b, and 11 b each with a cap 10 labelled 10 a, 10 b, and 10 b, and with a different tube 14 positionally fixed to the cap, as described above, to one of different length portion 17 labelled 17 a, 17 b, and 17 c extending lengths L′, L″, and L′″, respectively, to ends 18 a, 18 b, and 18 c, respectively, for use with three different bottles which increase in size, as least in terms of the height dimension (H) of the bottle, as shown for example for three different ones of bottle 16 of FIG. 9 labelled 16 a, 16 b, and 16 c.

As illustrated in FIG. 9, cylindrical body 24 of cap 10 is color coded to provide caps 10 a, 10 b, and 10 c, such as for example being black for a 125 ml bottle 16 a, orange for a 250 ml bottle 16 b, and blue for a 500 ml bottle 16 c, respectively, where lengths L′, L″, and L′″ are 6, 7.5, and 8 inches, respectively. For purposes of illustration, colors are depicted in FIG. 9 by different shades of gray along cap 10 a and 10 b, and white in cap 10 c, and tube 14 is shown truncated in extending from each of the caps away from their engaged example bottles. Other colors may be used, and additional caps of different colors, such as clear and white, may be used for 1 L and 2 L bottles, respectively. A chart is provided or made available to users which associates the color and/or indicia codes to different bottle sizes. This chart may be on a label attached, or printed upon, packaging of the above described kit. Although color is shown provided by material forming part of cap 10, i.e., body 24, the entire cap include portion 25 and body 24 may be of the same color code, or only portion 25 of the cap 10 is of elastomeric material which is color coded without body 24 being color coded.

Less preferably, different cap color is not used for visual coding, and an adhesive label 50 is used upon caps 10 with color indicia visually coding the caps 10 for different size bottles 16 a, 16 b, and 16 c, in accordance with the tube 14 length along portions 17 a, 17 b, and 17 c, such as shown for example in FIG. 10. Each label 50 may be as thin strip of media, such paper or plastic with an adhesive material on one surface and printed/coated with ink on the opposite surface of the proper color indicium which can be attached along the cap's curved outer surface 27. For purposes of illustration, the different angular cross-hatching of labels 50 may each be considered as being indicative of a different color indicium, as the figure itself is not in color. Optional ridges 27 a are removed from caps shown in FIGS. 7A, 7B, 7C, 8A, 8B, 8C, 9 and 10 for purposes of illustration, since different or no ridges may be provided along outer cap surface 27. However, when ridges 27 a are present and labels 50 are used, each label 50 can be applied to proper coded cap below ridges 27 a along smooth part of surface 27 of cap body 24. Optionally, additional or alternative indicium to color may be provided along labels 50. While caps 10 a, 10 b, and 10 b are shown in FIGS. 7A, 7B, 7C, 8A, 8B, 8C, 9A, 9B, 9C, 10A, 10B, and 10C with cap 10 of FIGS. 1, 2, 3, 4A and 4B, caps 10 a, 10 b, 10 c may be provided with one or more of the ports of FIG. 5C, 5D or 5E, and/or tube 14 a and 14 b of FIGS. 5C and 5D, if desired, where tube 14 b is mounted to caps 10 a, 10 b, and 10 c to extend respective lengths L′, L″, and L′″.

The system of the present invention having apparatuses 11 with caps 10, such as caps 10 a, 10 b, and 10 c of FIG. 9 or 10, visually coded for different sizes of bottle 16, such as bottle 16 a, 16 b, and 16 c, reduces error in experimental setup and operation so that the proper caps are selected for bottles. Further, by visually inspecting caps 10 by their color codes it can be readily determined that tubes 14 providing the feeder lines to bottles of same or different sizes correctly extend internally in such bottles without having to check each and every feeder line.

Optionally, one or more of the bottles each has a matching visual coding along at least a portion, e.g., exterior surface of the bottle, as with those caps which are coded for use therewith. For example, the proper matching color may be provided by an adhesively applied label or strip 51 to bottles 16 a, 16 b, and 16 c (similar or same as label 50) with same color as used on label 50 where labels 50 are used as depicted for example in FIG. 10 for coding caps 10 a, 10 b, and 10 c. In a further example, labels 51 may also be applied to bottles 16 a, 16 b, and 16 c in the example of FIG. 9, and each of the labels 51 have the respective different color which visually codes cap 10 a, 10 b, and 10 c. The use of labels 51 provided along bottles 16 coded to their sizes, at least in terms of height, can further assist a user in properly selecting bottles 16 a-c of proper size for engagement with their coded caps 10 a, 10 b, and 10 c. Optionally, such affixing of labels 51 to their respective bottles may be provided by each label 51 being attached to an elastomeric band that is stretched over the bottle, such as engaging about the bottle neck 36 below its threads 38 (e.g., along or instead of collar 36 a). For example, the label 51 may be retained by adhesive to the band and/or itself in a folded over or looped orientation along a portion of the band. Other means than labels 51 may also be used for providing a matching visual coding located along at least a portion of the bottle as those caps which are coded for use with such bottles, such as the entire material (e.g., molded plastic) forming bottles 16 a, 16 b, or 16 c, or a portion thereof (such as molded texture along top end 20 a below collar 36 a) being same, or similar to, the different color which visually codes caps 10 a, 10 b, and 10 c.

In FIG. 4B, the length L of the portion 17 of tube 14 (or tube 14 b) to end 18 to interior surface 19 is slightly less than the height H of the bottle to account for the thickness of the bottle's bottom wall at closed bottle end 20 b. While tube 14 (or 14 a and 14 b) and 15 are preferably flexible, such tubes are shown without any flexure(s) in FIGS. 1-3, 4A, 4B, 5B, 5C, 5D, 5E, 7A, 7B, 7C, 8A, 8B, and 8B. As shown in FIGS. 9 and 10, in order to assure portions 17 a, 17 b, and 17 c of tube 14 (or 14 b) extend in their respective apparatuses 11 a, 11 b, and 11 c to interior bottom surfaces 19 a, 19 b, and 19 c of any bottle 16 a, 16 b, and 16 c coded by caps 10 a, 10 b and 10 e, the portion 17 a, 17 b and 17 c are selected of a length plus a tolerance or offset so that they each extends slightly longer than the height H dimension of the bottles coded for the caps. For example, such addition length tolerance may be in a range of 0.25 to 0.5 inches, but other tolerance may be used as desired. Thus, unlike as illustrated in FIGS. 1 and 4B, flexibility of tube 14 (or 14 b) in bottle 16 allows its portion 17 to bend in bottle 16 so that end 18 lays upon, or extends along, the bottom interior 19 of the bottle in response to contacting such bottom interior 19 when tube 14 (or 14 b) is inserted in bottle 16, as shown for example by ends 18 a, 18 b, and 18 c of portions 17 a, 17 b, and 17 c, respectively, as depicted for example in FIGS. 9 and 10, coded for caps 10 a, 10 b, and 10 c, respectively. Further, while preferably the apparatus 11 does not include the bottle 16 intended to be engaged thereto, such apparatus 11 may optionally further encompass the bottle. Thus, depending on the flexibility of tube 14 (or 14 b), length L of its portion 17 is selected to be equal to the height H of the bottle 16 plus preferably a tolerance or offset to account for the flexibility of the tube to assure that the tube at least reaches or extends along, even substantially parallel to, the interior bottom of any of the bottles of the height to which the cap is coded for when engaging the cap, and without portion 17 being too long to end 18 as to undesirably risk bending of end 18 away from bottom end 20 b.

The above discussion in connection with FIGS. 1-10 describes visual coding along at least a portion of the cap 10 of each apparatus 11. In a further embodiment of the invention, all or a portion of tube 14 (or 14 b) in each apparatuses 11 may provide such visual coding, as shown for example in FIGS. 11-13, with or without at least a portion of cap 10 having the same or similar visual coding.

Referring to FIGS. 11-13, visual coding is provided by at least a portion of each tube 14 (or tube 14 b) being one of different colors 52 a, 52 b, and 52 c in apparatuses 11 a, 11 b, and 11 c, respectively, and caps 10 of each such apparatus 11 a, 11 b, and 11 c may be of the same or different colors (e.g., white, clear, or opaque) unrelated to such visual coding. In FIG. 11, visual coding is provided by the entire tube 14 being one of different colors 52 a, 52 b, and 52 c in apparatuses Ila, 11 b, and 11 c, respectively, to visually code different apparatuses for use with different size bottles in the same manner as different colored caps are coded as described earlier. In FIG. 12, each tube 14 of apparatuses 11 a, 11 b, and 11 c represents two tubes 14 a and 14 b engaged with a cap 10 having the body 24 a or 24 b as described earlier in connection with FIG. 5C or FIG. 5E, respectively. Each tube 14 b of apparatus 11 a, 11 b, and 11 c is of colors 52 a, 52 b, and 52 c, respectively, to visually code different apparatuses for use with different size bottles in the same manner as different colored caps are coded as described earlier. Optionally, both tubes 14 a and 14 b may be of colors 52 a, 52 b, and 52 c, respectively, and as such may be illustrated by FIG. 11 where caps 10 of FIG. 5C or 5E are used. Each one of different colored tubes 14, or tubes 14 b and/or 14 a, may be formed by the use of color additive(s) in the plastic material, such as thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU), when extruded into the shape of a tube. While a single color is preferably used, multiple or additional color(s) may be provided along tube 14, or tubes 14 b, to provide desired visual coding association for different size bottles.

In FIG. 13, each tube 14 may have a stripe 53 of one of different colors 52 a, 52 b, and 52 c extending along a length of the tube in apparatuses 11 a, 11 b, and 11 c, respectively, to visual code different apparatuses for use with different size bottles in the same manner as different colored caps are coded as described earlier. Each of the tubes 14 of FIG. 13, but for their stripes 53 may otherwise be of the same color (e.g., white, clear, or opaque) as desired. For purposes of illustration, stripes 53 are depicted in FIG. 13 as a black line or strip, however, the width of each stripe may be wider than shown so as to readily enable visual perception of its color. Stripe 53 may be of formed by medical grade ink or other material applied to the outer portion of the tube, or formed in the tube material when extruded, where the invention is not limited to any particular manner of tube manufacture.

The stripe 53 may extend along the length of tube 14 between its distal and proximal ends in apparatus 11 a, 11 b, and 11 c, or stripe 53 may be provided only along tube 14 b where caps 10 of FIG. 5C or 5E are used. While a single stripe 53 may be used along each tube 14, preferably multiple stripes are provided, such three, spaced equally from each other about the outer circumference of tube 14, where only one is shown for example in FIG. 13. Other different shape or sizes of stripe(s) 53 may be provided along tube 14 of apparatus 11 a, 11 b, and 11 c, such as those that extend helically, or multiple spaced stripes along tube circumference, e.g., continuous bands, as desired. Thus, in this example, each color 52 a, 52 b, 52 c provided by tube 14, tube 14 b, or stripe(s) 53 is associated with different sizes of bottles 16 a, 16 b, and, 16 c when fixed thereto by respective lengths L′, L″, and L′″ (FIGS. 8A-8C), such as for example being black for a 125 ml bottle 16 a, orange for a 250 ml bottle 16 b, and blue for a 500 ml bottle 16 c, respectively, where lengths L′, L″, and L′″ are 6, 7.5, and 8 inches, respectively. In contrast with FIG. 11, stripe(s) 53 are shown as an example of less than the entirety of the tube 14 (at least along portion 17) or tube 14 b being visually coded to bottle size, but other or different segment(s) or portion(s) of the tube may be visually coded as desired so long as such is easily perceptible to the human eye before and after insertion in a bottle.

Optionally, cap 10 a, 10 b, 10 c of FIG. 9 (body 24 or 24 a and/or portion 25) and their tubes 14 (or 14 b) of FIGS. 11-13 may have the same (at least approximately similar) visual coding by different colors 52 a, 52 b, and 52 c, respectively, such as described earlier in connection with FIGS. 1-10. Thus, in the assembly of the cap and tube 14 (or 14 b) at least a portion of one or both the cap and tube provide visual coding to one of different sizes of bottles at least in terms of bottle height. As in FIG. 9, for purposes of illustration, colors 52 a, 52 b, and 52 c are depicted in FIGS. 11-12 by different shades of gray and/or white, and tube 14 or 14 a is shown truncated in extending from each of the caps away from their engaged example bottles. Also, while colors are preferably used to provide visual coding of tubes 14 or 14 a, indicia codes as described earlier, alternatively or in addition to colors may be used. Further, as in FIGS. 9-10, FIGS. 11-13 depict tube 14 (or 14 a) having the preferred flexibility as described earlier when inserted in a bottle. One benefit of such flexibility when used in with a properly sized bottle is that it allows the tube 14 (or 14 a) to bend so that it may lie slightly sideways along a portion of bottom interior 19 of bottle end 20 b, which (along with the earlier described preferable non-square tube end 18) promotes suction of contents via tube end 18 to the bottom of the bottle when needed.

The system of the present invention having apparatuses 11 with caps 10, such as caps 10 a, 10 b, and 10 c of FIG. 9 or 10, and/or tubes 14 (or 14 b) of FIG. 11, 12, or 13, by visually coding for different sizes of bottles 16, such as bottle 16 a, 16 b, and 16 c, reduces error in experimental setup and operation so that the proper caps are selected for bottles. Further, by visually inspecting caps 10 and/or tubes 14 (or 14 b) by their color codes it can be readily determined that tubes providing the feeder lines to bottles of same or different sizes correctly extend internally in such bottles without having to check each and every feeder line.

As in the case of caps 10 when providing visual coding, labels 51 which may be applied to bottles 16 a, 16 b, and 16 c of FIG. 10 may have colors 52 a, 52 b, and 52 c, respectively, same or similar to those of visually coded tubes 14 or 14 b of FIGS. 11-13. The use of labels 51 provided along bottles 16 coded to their sizes, at least in terms of height, can further assist a user in properly selecting bottles 16 a-c of proper size for engagement of caps 10 by their coded tubes 14 (or 14 b). Optionally, such affixing of labels 51 to their respective bottles may be provided by each label 51 being attached to an elastomeric band that is stretched over the bottle, such as engaging about the bottle neck 36 below its threads 38 (e.g., along or instead of collar 36 a). For example, the label 51 may be retained by adhesive to the band and/or itself in a folded over or looped orientation along a portion of the band. Other means than labels 51 may also be used for providing a matching visual coding located along at least a portion of the bottle as those caps and/or tubes which are coded for use with such bottles, such as the entire material (e.g., molded plastic) forming bottles 16 a, 16 b, or 16 c, or a portion thereof (such as molded texture along top end 20 a below collar 36 a) being same, or similar to, different colors 52 a, 52 b, or 52 c, respectively.

From the foregoing description, it will be apparent that there has been provided a system, apparatus, and method for coding cap and tube assemblies for different bottle sizes, and apparatuses in kits incorporating same. Variations and modifications in the herein described system, method, apparatuses, and kits will undoubtedly suggest themselves to those skilled in the art. Accordingly, the foregoing description should be taken as illustrative and not in a limiting sense. 

1. A system for coding tubes for different bottle sizes comprising: a plurality of caps; a plurality of tubes having visual coding along at least a portion thereof for use with different sizes of bottles at least in accordance with a height of the bottles, and each of said plurality of tubes being mounted to, or through, a different one of said caps to extend a selected length which enables one end of the tube to reach, or extend along at least a portion of, an interior surface of a closed bottom end of any of the bottles of said height to which the tube is coded for use therewith when engaging said one of said cap.
 2. The system according to claim 1 wherein each of said plurality of tubes has at least a portion thereof of one of a plurality of different colors to provide said visual coding for the tube.
 3. The system according to claim 2 wherein said different one of said caps associated with each of said plurality of tubes has at least along a portion thereof a same or similar one of said plurality of different colors which provides said visual coding of the tube.
 4. The system according to claim 2 wherein said at least a portion of each of said plurality of tubes has one or more additional colors with said one of said plurality of colors to provide said visual coding for the tube.
 5. The system according to claim 1 wherein each of said plurality of tubes is formed of material of one of a plurality of different colors to provide said visual coding for the tube.
 6. The system according to claim 1 wherein each of said plurality of tubes has one or more stripes of one of a plurality of different colors to provide said visual coding for the tube.
 7. The system according to claim 1 wherein each of said plurality of tubes is flexible and extends from said cap to enable the tube to bend in response to contact with said closed bottom end when inserted in any of the bottles of said height to which the tube is coded for use therewith.
 8. The system according to claim 1 wherein each of said plurality of caps has a closed top end, an aperture extending through said closed top end, and each of said plurality of tubes is mounted to extend through the aperture of the closed top end of said different one of said caps, and non-adjustably fixed in position with respect to the aperture.
 9. The system according to claim 1 wherein each of said plurality of caps comprises a generally cylindrical body shaped to form the cap with an open bottom end, and a closed top end with material, different from said body, having an aperture, and each of said plurality of tubes is mounted to the cap after extending through said aperture of said different one of said caps.
 10. The system according to claim 1 wherein each of said plurality of caps comprises a generally cylindrical body shaped to form the cap with an open bottom end and a closed top end having at least one aperture that extending through said top end of the cap, and said one end of each of said tubes represents a first one of two ends of the tube, and each of said tubes has a second one of said two ends of said tube which is mounted in said aperture, via said open bottom end, of said different one of said caps.
 11. The system according to claim 10 wherein said plurality of tubes represents a plurality of first tubes, each of said plurality of caps comprises a port to said aperture disposed along a top side of said closed top end of the cap, and a second tube is mountable in said port for communication with the one of said plurality of first tubes that has said second one of said two ends mounted in said aperture.
 12. The system according to claim 10 wherein said plurality of tubes represent a plurality of first tubes, and each of said plurality of caps comprises a port to said aperture disposed along a top side of said closed top end, said port having an exterior with a plurality of barbs configured for engaging a second tube over said port in engagement with said barbs.
 13. The system according to claim 1 wherein each of said plurality of caps further comprises an air vent through the cap.
 14. The system according to claim 1 further comprising another tube, different from said plurality of tubes, mounted to extend through said different one of said caps to provide an air vent.
 15. The system according to claim 1 wherein each of said plurality of tubes is mounted in an aperture extending through a closed top end of said different one of said caps, and said system further comprises bonding material along the aperture which non-adjustably fixes the tube with respect to said different one of said caps after being extended through said aperture.
 16. The system according to claim 1 wherein each of said plurality of tubes is flexible, and said selected length of the tube is determined in accordance with the height of any of the bottles to which the tube is coded for use therewith and any bending or flexing of the tube to further enable said one end of the tube to reach, or extend along at least a portion of, the interior surface of the closed bottom end of any of the bottles of said height to which the tube is coded for use therewith when engaging said different one of said caps.
 17. The system according to claim 1 wherein one or more of the bottles each have said visual coding located along at least a portion thereof which matches said visual coding of said ones of said plurality of tubes which are coded for use with said one or more of the bottles.
 18. A method for coding tubes for different bottle sizes comprising steps of: providing tubes visually coded for use with different size bottles at least in accordance with height of said bottles; and mounting each of said tubes to, or through, a different one of a plurality of caps to extend a selected length which enables one end of the tube to reach, or extend along at least a portion of, an interior surface of a closed bottom end of any of the bottles of said height to which the tube is coded for use therewith when engaging said one of said different one of said plurality of caps.
 19. An apparatus coding tubes for bottles having one of a plurality of different sizes, said apparatus comprising: a tube having two ends; a cap having at least an aperture extending through a closed top end of the cap, said aperture being sized to receive said tube, and said tube being mounted to, or through, said aperture of the cap to extend a length from said cap to one of said two ends, and said tube is fixed in position with respect to said aperture; and said tube being visually coded with one of a plurality of colors along at least a portion thereof to associate the apparatus with bottles having one of a plurality of different sizes in terms of at least one dimension, and said length of said tube from said cap to said one of said ends being selected to enable said one of said ends of said tube to reach, or extend along at least a portion of, an interior of a closed bottom end of any of the bottles having said one of said plurality of different sizes when engaging said cap.
 20. The apparatus according to claim 19 wherein said dimension is at least in terms of height from the closed bottom end to an opposing open end suitable for engaging the cap, and said length of said tube from said cap to one of said ends is selected in accordance with the height of the bottles having said one of said plurality of different sizes to enable said one of said ends of said tube to reach, or extend along at least a portion of, the interior of the bottom end of any of the bottles having said one of said plurality of different sizes when engaging said cap.
 21. The apparatus according to claim 20 wherein said tube is flexible and the length of said tube selected equals the height of the bottles having one of said plurality of different sizes plus any offset to account for any bending or flexing of said tube to further enable said one of said ends of said tube to reach, or extend along at least a portion of, the interior of the bottom end of any of the bottles having said one of said plurality of different sizes when engaging said cap.
 22. The apparatus according to claim 19 wherein said tube represents a first tube and said aperture represents a first aperture, and said apparatus further comprises a second tube with two ends, and said cap has a second aperture sized to receive one of said ends of said second tube to provide an air vent when said cap engages any of the bottles having said one of said plurality of different sizes.
 23. The apparatus according to claim 19 wherein said aperture represents a first aperture, and said cap has a second aperture to provide an air vent when said cap engages any of the bottles having said one of said plurality of different sizes.
 24. The apparatus according to claim 19 wherein said apparatus represents a kit containing at least said tube and said cap.
 25. The apparatus according to claim 19 wherein said apparatus represents one of a plurality of different apparatuses each having one of said tubes visually coded with a different one of said plurality of colors associated with bottles of different ones of said plurality of different sizes.
 26. The apparatus according to claim 19 wherein one or more of the bottles of said one of said plurality of different sizes are each same or similarly visually coded as the tube along a portion of the bottle.
 27. The apparatus according to claim 19 wherein said tube extends partially through said aperture by another of said two ends of the tube being mounted into the aperture to extend said length from said cap to said one of said ends; and said tube represents a first tube, said aperture has two open ends, said another of said two ends first tube is received in a lower one of said ends of said aperture, and said apparatus further comprises a second tube received in an upper one of said ends of said aperture.
 28. The apparatus according to claim 19 wherein said portion of tube being visually coded represents an entirety of material forming the tube of said one of a plurality of different colors to associate said apparatus with said bottles having said one of a plurality of different sizes.
 29. The apparatus according to claim 19 wherein said portion of tube being visually coded represents one or more strips of said one of a plurality of different colors to associate said apparatus with said bottles having said one of a plurality of different sizes.
 30. The apparatus according to claim 19 wherein said tube is visually coded along said at least a portion thereof using one or more additional colors with said one of said plurality of colors.
 31. The apparatus according to claim 19 wherein both said at least a portion of said tube and at least a portion of said cap have of one of said plurality of colors to associate the apparatus with said bottles having said one of a plurality of different sizes in terms of at least said one dimension.
 32. A system for visually coding assemblies of caps and tubes for different size bottles comprising: a plurality of assemblies, each said assemblies comprises a cap with an aperture and a flexible tube mounted to, or through said aperture, and fixed to the cap; different ones of said plurality of assemblies each have a different visual coding along at least a portion thereof for association with different ones of sizes of bottles at least in accordance with height of the bottles; and said tube of each of said assemblies extends a selected length from the cap of the assembly so that one end of the tube bends in response to reaching, or extending along at least a portion of, an interior surface of a bottom end of any of the bottles the assembly is visually coded for use therewith when engaged with the cap of the assembly.
 33. The system according to claim 32 wherein said different visual coding is at least a different color for each of the different ones of said plurality of assemblies.
 34. The system according to claim 32 wherein at least a part of the cap of at least one of said plurality of assemblies represents said portion thereof.
 35. The system according to claim 32 wherein an entirety, or one or more segments, of the tube of at least one of said plurality of assemblies represents said portion thereof.
 36. The system according to claim 32 wherein at least part of both the tube and the cap for at least one of said plurality of assemblies represents said portion thereof.
 37. A bottle coded for use with an assembly of a cap and tube mounted thereto, said bottle comprising: a container in a shape of a bottle having an open end and a closed bottom end with an interior surface, wherein said bottle extends a height between said open end and said closed bottom end; said open end being configured for engaging an assembly of a cap having a tube mounted to, or there through, extending a selected length in accordance with the height of the bottle so that one end of the tube will reach, or extend along at least a portion of, said interior surface of said closed bottom end, in which at least a portion of said assembly has one or more of visual color and indicia coding said assembly for use with said bottle of said height; and at least a portion of said container or a label affixed to said container matches said one or more visual color and indicia to assist a user in selecting said bottle having said height for engagement with said assembly when coded for use therewith.
 38. The bottle according to claim 37 wherein said height is less than the length of said tube of said assembly when engaging said open end of said container to account for any flexibility of said tube which bends in response to contact with said closed bottom end. 